FACTS ABOUT CAMBODIA
AMAZING
FACTS ABOUT CAMBODIA
1.
The official name of Cambodia is the “Kingdom
of Cambodia”.
2.
Phnom Penh is the capital city of
Cambodia.
3.
The total population of Cambodia is 15,957,223.
4.
The natives of Cambodia are called
Cambodians.
5.
The Riela (KHR) is the official currency
of Cambodia.
6.
Cambodia shares a border with Thailand,
Vietnam and Laos.
7.
Buddhism is the official religion of
Cambodia, which is practiced by approximately 95 percent of the population.
8.
This branch of Buddhism (Theravada Buddhism)
follows the teachings of the Tipitaka or Pali Canon, which is a collection of
the oldest recorded texts of Buddha’s teachings. There are more than 100
million Theravada Buddhists today.
9.
Evidence from carbon dating suggests
that Cambodia was inhabited as early as 4000 B.C.
10.
Did you know that recently, multiple
cities between 900 and 1,400 years old beneath the tropical forest floor, some
of which rival the size of Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh, were revealed by the
cutting-edge airborne laser scanning technology?
11.
Archeologists say that there is also a
massive city beneath Mount Kulen.
12.
In Cambodia, millions of land mines were
planted during the war years. There is a land mine removal trust in Cambodia
that is operational today, which assists in the removal of the mines, making
the country safer.
13.
Cambodia has the largest population of
amputees in the world caused by landmines. Over 64,000 casualties related to
landmines have been recorded since 1979. Almost half of the landmines are yet
to be removed.
14.
A Pepsi bottling plant in Battambang,
which began its operations in the 1960s, was forcefully shut down in 1975
during the Khmer Rouge’s control of the country. Today, the building is no
longer standing.
15.
Until 1953, Cambodia was a protectorate
(a state that is controlled and protected by another) of France.
16.
There are 1.3 million mopeds in Cambodia
for a population of over 1.5 million people. Thus, you can find mopeds almost
everywhere you find people in the country.
17.
KFC, the American fast food giant is
losing money in Cambodia, which is the only country where they are not
profitable. There are only 6 of these fast food centers in Cambodia. Surprised?
Cambodia also does not have McDonalds.
18.
An estimated four million landmines are
still to be cleared from Cambodia.
19.
Cambodians do not celebrate their
birthdays. Many older people do not even know how old they are.
20.
Cambodia has a young population. Most of
its population is under 20 years of age.
21.
Funerals are quite expensive in
Cambodia, and one may cost an average of $9,000. The procedure typically
lasts more than 49 days, and the body is preserved for the first seven.
22.
In Cambodia, genocide (the systematic
killing of people on the basis of ethnicity, religion, political opinion,
social status, etc.) was carried out by the Khmer Rouge (KR) regime between
1975 and 1979, killing at least one and a half to three million people. The
genocide came to an end when Vietnam invaded Cambodia.
23.
The bodies of the people that were
killed in the genocide were buried in the “Killing Fields.” The term Killing
Fields was coined by the Cambodian journalist – Dith Pran – after he escaped
from the regime that led to the killings of so many Cambodians.
24.
Cambodia is also home to the first of
its kind – “the Killing Cave” of Phnom Sampeau. The cave has the bones of the
doctors, teachers, men, women, and children killed by the Khmer Rouge.
25.
There is a small carving of a dinosaur
on the walls of a temple at Ta Prohm. The carving might be an indication that
dinosaurs lived on much later than originally thought. However, there is no
concrete evidence for this assumption.
26.
There is a “blind clinic” in Cambodia
where you can receive massages from blind people. These people are trained in
the art of massage so that they can make their living.
27.
During the Vietnam War, the U.S. also
bombed Cambodia from 1963 until 1973.
28.
Cambodia is one of the fastest-growing
economies in Asia with an average growth rate of more than 6% in the last ten
years.
29.
The name “Kampuchea” is more widely used
in the East for “Cambodia.”
30.
Kids take note that apart from
Afghanistan’s national flag, the national flag of Cambodia is the only other
national flag in the world to incorporate an actual building on it.
31.
Despite Cambodia being one of the
poorest countries in Asia, it received a whopping 5 million visitors during
2016, bringing in about $3 billion in revenue. Clearly, tourism is playing a
vital role in helping the economic growth of the country. (Source)
32.
The garment and footwear sector in
Cambodia is also among the top sectors that support the nation’s economy. More
than 600,000 Cambodians are employed in these two sectors, the majority of whom
are women. Learn more…
33.
Rice is considered to be the first crop
that was grown on Cambodian soil since before the first century, AD.
34.
The Tonle Sap (Great Lake) in Cambodia
measures about 2,590 square kilometers in the dry season and expands to about
24,605 kilometers during the rainy season. This is an unusual annual inundation
(flooding) of the region. It is also densely populated and is devoted to wet
rice cultivation. The region is also referred as “the heartland of Cambodia.”
35.
The Tonle Sap is also the largest salt
water lake in Southeast Asia.
36.
Cambodia is losing forests very fast.
The rate of deforestation in Cambodia is one of the highest in the world, third
only to Nigeria and Vietnam. Between 2001 and 2014, the annual forest loss rate
in Cambodia increased by 14.4 percent. The main reason behind this heavy
deforestation is the illegal cutting of the forest by smugglers for monetary
gains from the valuable timber.
37.
Hun Sen, Cambodia’s present Prime
Minister became the world’s youngest head of the state when he was 32 years and
162 days old.
38.
He has ruled Cambodia for more than 25
years and vows to continue his regime as the Prime Minister until he is 74.
However, the ruler is said to have maintained his position in the government by
oppression and violence.
39.
In 2011 Hun said that if anyone tried to
hold a demonstration against his rule “I will beat all those dogs and put them
in a cage.”
40.
It is a harsh fact about Cambodia that
more than two and a half million people in the country live on less than $1.20
per day.
41.
China and the U.K are the largest
foreign investors in Cambodia.
42.
Khmer Rouge can be defined as a
communist guerrilla organization. It opposed the Cambodian government in the
1960s and waged a civil war from 1970, taking power in 1975
(oxforddictionaries.com.)
43.
The Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK),
also known as the Khmer Rouge, gained control of Cambodia on April 17, 1975.
However, the party’s existence was kept a secret until 1977.
44.
Pol Pot (real name – Saloth Sar), also
touted as one of the world’s most infamous dictators, was appointed as the
party’s secretary and leader in 1963.
45.
The aim of the party (Khmer Rouge) was
to establish a classless state with a rural agrarian economy.
46.
During the party’s rule, human life was
disregarded; and repression and massacre prevailed on a massive scale. Nearly
two million people died during the period between 1975 and 1979.
47.
Vietnam supported the Khmer Rouge only
to withdraw from Cambodia by the end of 1972. Now, the major responsibilities
of the war rested on the shoulders of the Communist Party of Kampuchea (the
Khmer Rouge.)
48.
As many as 300,000 people in Cambodia
were killed as a result of the bombing, which the Khmer Republic government did
with assistance from the U.S. Many people who suffered from the bombing joined
the Khmer Rouge.
49.
In an attempt to transform Cambodia into
a rural, classless society, public schools, pagodas, mosques, churches,
universities, shops and government buildings were shut or turned into prisons,
stables, re-education camps and granaries. There was no public or private
transportation, no private property, and no non-revolutionary entertainment.
Public gatherings and discussions were banned during the period.
50.
The KCP, soon after getting hold of the
country, arrested and killed thousands of soldiers, military officers and civil
servants from the Khmer Republic regime led by Marshal Lon Nol.
51.
Known as S-21, the most important prison
in Cambodia held almost 14,000 prisoners, only 12 of whom survived. The Khmer
Rouge was responsible for the detention, interrogation, and execution of these
many prisoners.
52.
In what is believed to have been the
most brutal rule in the history of the world, Cambodians at that time were
forced to grow at least three tons of rice per hectare throughout the country.
The consequence of this torturous punishment was that the civilians had to work
(forcefully) more than 12 hours a day throughout these years without adequate
food and rest.
53.
Angkor Wat is the world’s largest
religious monument, covering an area of 162.6 hectares.
54.
The temple was built by the Khmer King
Suryavarman II in the early 12th century.
55.
The temple was initially a Hindu temple.
However, gradually it got transformed into a Buddhist temple by the end of the
12th century.
56.
Angkor Wat means “Temple City” or “City
of Temples” in Khmer.
57.
A Portuguese monk – António da Madalena
– one of the first Western visitors to the temple, said that it “is of such
extraordinary construction that it is not possible to describe it with a pen.
58.
Almost half of the international
tourists coming to Cambodia come to visit the Angkor Wat. Angkor Wat ticket
sales generated $20 million in revenue during the first three months of 2016.
59.
The temple, unlike various other temples
in its vicinity, faces the west – a direction that is associated with death.
The norm at the time was to build temples pointing east.
60.
The exact reason for such orientation by
the builders of the temple is yet unknown. However, generally, the structure is
regarded as a funerary temple.
61.
The region of Angkor has been declared a
UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1992. There are a total of three such sites,
the other two are:
62.
The temple is undergoing restoration
work. Most of the restoration work is sponsored through foreign aid. And only
about 28% of the revenue generated from the sale of tickets to visitors is
spent on the temple’s restoration work.
63.
The temple also featured in the movie
“Tomb Raider.” The movie’s production house was charged $10,000 per day for
seven days of filming there.
64.
Cambodia Exports: clothing, timber,
rubber, rice, fish, tobacco and footwear.
65.
Cambodia Exports: petroleum products,
cigarettes, gold, construction materials, machinery, motor vehicles and
pharmaceutical products.
66.
The internet country code for Cambodia
is .kh.
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